The Major Critics: The Development of English Literary CriticismCharles Shiveley Holmes Knopf, 1957 - 313 sivua |
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Sivu 109
... give the relation : but the French avoid this with great address , making their narrations only to , or by such , who are some way interested in the main design . And now I am speaking of relations , I cannot take a fitter opportunity ...
... give the relation : but the French avoid this with great address , making their narrations only to , or by such , who are some way interested in the main design . And now I am speaking of relations , I cannot take a fitter opportunity ...
Sivu 147
... give , And each bold figure just begins to live , The treach'rous colours the fair art betray , And all the bright creation fades away ! Unhappy wit , like most mistaken things , Atones not for that envy which it brings ; In youth alone ...
... give , And each bold figure just begins to live , The treach'rous colours the fair art betray , And all the bright creation fades away ! Unhappy wit , like most mistaken things , Atones not for that envy which it brings ; In youth alone ...
Sivu 269
... give of the novel . But history also is allowed to represent life ; it is not , any more than painting , expected to apologise . The subject matter of fiction is stored up likewise in documents and records , and if it will not give ...
... give of the novel . But history also is allowed to represent life ; it is not , any more than painting , expected to apologise . The subject matter of fiction is stored up likewise in documents and records , and if it will not give ...
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action Ancients Aristotle artistic beauty Ben Jonson Besant blank verse character Charles Adderley cism Coleridge Comedy composition creative Crites criticism delight Donne doth drama Dryden emotion English Epic Epic poetry Eugenius Euripides excellent expression feelings fiction French French Revolution genius Goethe Gorboduc hath Homer honour human ideas imagination imitation incidents Jonson judge judgment kind knowledge language learning Lisideius literary literature living Lycidas mean ment metaphysical metaphysical poets metre mind moral nature never novel object observed Paradise Lost passions perfection perhaps persons philosopher play pleasure plot poem Poesy poet poet's poetic poetry Polygnotus Pope practical praise produced prose reader reason rhyme rules sense Shakespeare Silent Woman Sophocles speak stage style T. S. Eliot taste things thought tion Tragedy true truth unity verse whole words Wordsworth writ write